Have you ever had a conversation with a distant family
member who sees you occasionally and you realize that this person doesn’t really
know you? They see you as who you were years ago. Their mental image of you has
not kept up with the times.
This is a typical point of contention in families: as
children grow and change, their parents and the other adults in their lives
struggle to keep up, especially when the changes happen so quickly. However, children
aren’t the only ones who change; we all keep growing.
I look back at my first years as a teacher, and I shake my
head. I am amazed that I made it through! I am embarrassed by my mistakes, and I
wonder what took me so long to figure things out. Sometimes, I look back at last
week in the classroom and feel the same way.
One of the appeals of throwback Thursday is this
embarrassment. We see the old photos and we are shocked! Yes, that is me, but
it looks nothing like I am now - on the
outside.
I meet former students who have grown up, sometimes way up,
and I struggle to see the person I knew years ago. Of course, they have changed
physically, and as we talk, I am amazed and delighted by the wonderful people
they have become. The person I knew has transformed into someone better.
Often, I beat myself up over stupid things I have done in
the past. Sometimes, I am that distant relative who can’t see the older me. Maybe
I am in denial, refusing to see the present me. Maybe I get stuck.
It is easier to hang on to the past, clinging to the idea
that our identities are static. I don’t
want to have to keep relearning and changing my views. I want people to be like
the characters in books. My favorite characters are always in those
pages. I know exactly what they will do. They are comfortingly predictable.
Real people don’t work that way.
The reverse is true as well: I don’t want to let go of the
negative feelings I had toward people in my past. I want to believe they are
the same as when they hurt me long, long ago. Sometimes, those nasty people are
still nasty. Sometimes, they have also changed and they, too, are embarrassed by
their pasts. We don’t have to forget the past, but we shouldn’t imprint it on
the present.
When we see people daily or even just a few times a month,
we don’t notice the changes. We adjust in such small increments that we are
fooled into thinking nothing has changed. When we see people only occasionally
or merely connect through Facebook, Instagram, or email, we are really
conversing more with an old photograph than an old friend.
When my students visit, I need to get to know them again. We
share a powerful past, but we haven’t shared much recently. Social media may
provide the information, but those old anchors stay put. We have to take a new
photo.
We are not who we were. I am not the person, teacher,
husband, father, son, brother, friend, or relative I was years (or months) ago
–and there big changes ahead.
2 comments:
You totally nailed Year One! Janes and I gave you both barrels and you were STILL awesome!
I don't post comments, but I should, because your blog SPEAKS to me. This one was unbelievably LOUD as it spoke. There were so many sentences you wrote that I connected with that I just can't quote them all. Fantastic blog today.
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